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How Gun Culture Won Over Liberals
BuzzFeed ^ | January 17, 2013 | McKay Coppins, CJ Lotz

Posted on 01/17/2013 11:55:53 AM PST by lbryce

On a Sunday morning a couple years ago, Brooklyn journalist Foster Kamer and a few of his "particularly liberal" blogger friends decided to skip brunch and hit the shooting range instead.

"We said, hey, let's do something ridiculous," he recalled. "Let's go shoot guns."

They chose the nearest site they found, a range that operated out of a basement in midtown Manhattan. "The first thing that happened when we got there was we heard some guy hammering away at a target with what sounded like a cannon. It was just in such tight quarters. It kind of freaked us out."

It didn't keep them away, though.

One 30-minute gun safety lesson and a few bucks later, Kamer and his friends were blasting away at their own targets — the first of many. "Sometimes we go bowling, sometimes we eat together, and sometimes we go shooting," he said. "It's something to do."

The current flare-up in the long political battle over gun laws is coming at a moment when American gun culture is more expansive than ever, having gained a foothold among the type of coastal elites that, just a couple decades ago, would have dismissed the very idea of holding a rifle as obscene and offensive. Hunting and recreational shooting, once viewed by the left as backwater pastimes, have won over a liberal coalition of eco-conscious locavores, hipster hunters, and adventure-seeking New York media elites.

Since that first experience, Kamer has made a handful of trips to a New Jersey shooting range, bringing along a cadre of Twitter-savvy media types — including New York Times columnist David Carr and Reuters social media editor Anthony De Rosa — who post photos of themselves posing with guns and tweet trash talk about each other's shots.

Not long ago, photos like the one of Carr and co. posing with shotguns likely would have scandalized their more righteous liberal peers. In 1994, The New York Times Magazine captured the left's gun taboo at the time with a long, first-person essay by a "hoplophobe" (someone with a morbid fear of weapons) who decides to visit a shooting range. The gun-fearing author, Phillip Weiss, disapprovingly describes the "almost orgasmic" feeling of wielding a shotgun, frets about the weapon's threat to the "social contract," and concludes that guns represent a "crude means of arriving at that feeling" of sovereignty.

These days, Kamer said, his outings to the gun range elicit little more than a shrug and some gentle teasing from even his friends.

"They'll be like, 'Man, you probably haven't done anything remotely athletic or outdoorsy in a long time. And I'm like, 'Hey, I can play a game of pickup basketball too. Get off me,'" Kamer said, reasoning that the hobby had little to do with violence. "I mean, this is actually an Olympic sport."

Of course, not all of Kamer's fellow sharp shooters travel in such open-minded circles. One occasional guest on the skeet shooting trips, James Del, works as the advertising director at Gawker, which recently published 446 pages containing the names of every registered gun owner in New York.

The headline: "Here Is a List of All the Assholes Who Own Guns in New York City."

On a recent evening at Bull's Head Tavern in Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood, twentysomething revelers balanced IPAs in one hand, and toy firearms — green handled or blaze orange — in the other. Antelope and deer loped across an HD screen, and players took turns drunkenly firing off shots at them. This was Big Buck Hunter, an arcade shooting game that has gained irony-fueled popularity across New York. About 130 bars in the city claim to offer it, and last November one East Village dive bar hosted a Big Buck Hunter world championship.

"It is our big draw," said Bull's Head bartender Jess. "People drive from Jersey to play it."

Stereotypes of the hunter as the backwoods, toothless animal-killer span pop culture, from Elmer Fudd to South Park's Uncle Jimbo — the gun-totin', do-what-I-want wacko who hunts despite laws passed by "the Democrats." He tells Cartman and friends to yell, "It's coming right for us!" before shooting so that even rabbit hunting can be explained in court as a matter of self-defense.

In recent years, the "urban woodsman" trend has been well-documented, with one 2010 Esquire piece referring to the emerging flanel-and-boots hipster aesthetic as the "Field-and-Streamification" of fashion.

But veteran hunters say the the the movement extends beyond Urban Outfitters stocking up on hunting caps. Bill Heavey writes for Field & Stream as well as Garden & Gun, a stylish Southern lifestyle magazine that has attracted a devoted blue-state readership well outside its Charleston, South Carolina, headquarters. He said the rise of the "locavore" food trend — which favors free-range, organic, local meat — has inspired swarms of urban-dwelling foodies to trek out to the wilderness and try killing their own protein.

It's an audience the longtime outdoors writer thinks he can now reach with a new book he's working on.

"In my book, I'm hoping to keep my Field & Stream readers and cross over a little bit into the mainstream for people who are interested in alternatives to the food industry," Heavey said. "People are realizing as they're looking for free-range organic meat that venison fits the bill."

The demographics are changing too. One in ten American hunters now is female, and the average age is skewing younger, said hunting blogger Holly Heyser.

"I've seen a lot of daddies taking their young daughters out hunting," she said. "That's a huge change. A decade ago people wanted to take their sons."

For all the shifts, though, it remains to be seen whether the liberal infatuation with guns can survive the political sea change caused by a series of mass shootings last year. For the first time in decades, gun control advocates believe public opinion is firmly enough on their side that they will be able to defeat powerful lobbyists like the NRA in Congress — or reap the electoral fruits if they don't.

As for Kamer, he said he hasn't picked up a gun since last July, when a masked shooter opened fire on a crowded movie theater in Aurora, Colorado.

"After that, I think the thought just occurred to me, like, you know, there's something that feels a little bit weird about doing this right now," he said. "I just kept thinking, Jesus God, am I propagating this? Is there a way to justify this to myself?"

But Kamer, who spoke to BuzzFeed Wednesday afternoon, minutes after President Barack Obama went on TV and laid out the most aggressive gun control agenda in a generation, said there should be room on the left for both a cultural appreciation for guns, and support for the president's efforts.

"Do I plan to go back again [to the range]? Yeah, yeah, I probably will," he said. "Would I mind my ID being checked and having to sign off on a bunch of forms before I'm handed a rifle and a box of 20 shells? Hell no, I wouldn't mind."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: banglist; fun; guncontrol; guns; liberals; secondamendment
Gun culture among liberals is not the same corrosive, moral decadence it is among the typical NRA gun nut. Liberals engage in their Constitutionally protected rights in gun play that is enlightening, as privileged sport frivolity, socially evolutionary ritual that denotes power and success, and isn't that what the 'American Dream' is all about? On the other hand gun advocates as of those of the NRA, take their guns much too seriously, in a sort of collective primal rage, and that's where the danger of the gun lobby lies. So any argument that liberals are decidedly hypocritical in general, and regarding guns in particular, is moot.
1 posted on 01/17/2013 11:55:56 AM PST by lbryce
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To: lbryce

A couple of years ago when my wife was taking her CC class, there was a young couple there and the girl had never shot a gun in her life and was scared to death of guns. She was so upset when they got to the range she was crying. After mudh encouragement (and maybe a few promises), they got her to shoot a .22 pistol. By the time they finished she was all smiles and said, “That was fun! Can we shoot some more?”

Moral of the story, take a liberal shooting and you may convert one of them over from the dark side.


2 posted on 01/17/2013 12:07:31 PM PST by Blood of Tyrants (The only thing that Hollywood gets right about guns is that criminals will always get them.)
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To: lbryce

I don’t get you. That is an elitist argument. Are you telling me liberals are elitist?

Liberals are better people, therefore only they should be allowed to use Guns. NRA are bad people and should be quiet instead of advocating for greater liberty?


3 posted on 01/17/2013 12:08:46 PM PST by Bayard
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To: Blood of Tyrants

Nice story. Of course, the most hard-core liberals think that guns talk to each other at night and when they feel like it, start shooting stuff.


4 posted on 01/17/2013 12:13:05 PM PST by max americana (Make the world a better place by punching a liberal in the face)
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To: lbryce

What is actually happening is that an issue that never should have been partisan to begin with is leaking out of its ideological envelope. It’s been going on for some time now. That is very threatening to those who use that ideological envelope to manipulate people.


5 posted on 01/17/2013 12:20:39 PM PST by Billthedrill
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To: Bayard

It’s sarcasm. I apologize for omitting the sarcasm tag. I wrote it to be so absurd as to forgo the necessity to identify it as such.


6 posted on 01/17/2013 12:23:55 PM PST by lbryce (BHO:"Now, I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds by way Oppenheiner at Trinity NM)
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To: Blood of Tyrants

As a sometimes “Lurker” at DU, I have found that the pro 2nd Amendment and RKBA types there are just as vehement in their support as any NRA member. They have a tough fight there, but they fight it well.

And yes, I do a brain-purge and all-over-antiseptic-shower after leaving the site...


7 posted on 01/17/2013 12:32:29 PM PST by Paisan
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To: Blood of Tyrants

Generally I blame the violent video games for the mass killings by young people.

But it occurred to me that with all these young people playing all sorts of war games on XBOX etc. that a lot of them want to tryout the real guns as they get older.

So IMO the violent video games over time has actually helped more people get interested in trying to shoot a real gun. And once they do they are hooked.


8 posted on 01/17/2013 12:37:59 PM PST by Hang'emAll (Those who abuse Liberty, sentence themselves to Death! - Soldier LT)
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To: Paisan
Lurking at DU reminds me of a scene in the current Les Miserables film; a particularly realistic tour of the 19th Century Paris sewers.

If you want to see what that crowd is thinking, www.liberalgunclub.com is a better venue. Nowhere near the same level of red-faced leftist hysteria.

9 posted on 01/17/2013 12:45:29 PM PST by Charles Martel (Endeavor to persevere...)
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To: Paisan

Are they vehement in defense of guns as a tool of self-defense or merely as sport-hunting, etc? Because I’ve never heard of a leftist who didn’t think that unreasonable racism didn’t lurk in the heart of every white person and that nothing but that raging unreasonable racism would ever require a white person (ie Zimmerman) to shoot a black person (ie Saint Trayvon), even though a majority of crime, especially violent crime, is committed by young black males.


10 posted on 01/17/2013 12:47:45 PM PST by mrsmel (One Who Can See)
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To: lbryce
Stereotypes of the hunter as the backwoods, toothless animal-killer span pop culture, from Elmer Fudd to South Park's Uncle Jimbo — the gun-totin', do-what-I-want wacko who hunts despite laws passed by "the Democrats." He tells Cartman and friends to yell, "It's coming right for us!" before shooting so that even rabbit hunting can be explained in court as a matter of self-defense.

They can't use self defense as an excuse after the Colorado legislature passed P#$$& Law #4: "No animal shall be harmed, even in self defense, unless specific license and season is in order. Self defense can only be justified by extreme, provable peril and or docummented visible bodily harm." Now they have to kill to thin the herd to keep the animals from starving.

http://www.spscriptorium.com/Season2/E206script.htm

11 posted on 01/17/2013 12:59:39 PM PST by KarlInOhio (Choose one: the yellow and black flag of the Tea Party or the white flag of the Republican Party.)
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To: Paisan

I would think that after 8 years of the “fascist tyranny” of “Chimpy McBusHitler” that liberals wouldn’t be so eager to give up their guns.


12 posted on 01/17/2013 1:02:02 PM PST by CtBigPat (Free Republic - The grown-ups table of the internet.)
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To: Blood of Tyrants
A couple of years ago when my wife was taking her CC class, there was a young couple there and the girl had never shot a gun in her life and was scared to death of guns. She was so upset when they got to the range she was crying. After mudh encouragement (and maybe a few promises), they got her to shoot a .22 pistol. By the time they finished she was all smiles and said, “That was fun! Can we shoot some more?”

Similar experience. When I was dating my wife she was a died in the wool dem. Hated guns. Took her shooting, let her blast away with my Ruger Mk I. After about 20-40 shots she said "This is fun I don't know what all the fuss is about, when can we do this again?"

She now has her CC permit and votes Conservative.

13 posted on 01/17/2013 1:06:22 PM PST by Hope for the Republic (The 1st amendment is protected by the 2nd amendment)
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To: Charles Martel; Paisan

I like to see the gun threads over at DU. They have some people who cite facts and statistics, and use real, actual logic, and then they’ll get 10 replies that are near hysterical, red-faced (as you noted), “I don’t care what the facts are - we need to ban guns” kinds of posts. I feel sorry for those guys. I always think that some day they’ll wise up and realize they’re on the wrong website.


14 posted on 01/17/2013 1:16:38 PM PST by Hardastarboard (The Liberal ruling class hates me. The feeling is mutual.)
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To: mrsmel

Are they vehement in defense of guns as a tool of self-defense...?

Indeed they are.

See Post #14 - well said and very true. They are out-numbered, but they would make you proud. I too suspect they will wake up and migrate to Free Republic...


15 posted on 01/17/2013 1:27:45 PM PST by Paisan
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To: Paisan
As a sometimes “Lurker” at DU, I have found that the pro 2nd Amendment and RKBA types there are just as vehement in their support as any NRA member.

I do too. It can be entertaining. Free Republic is solidly pro-RKBA so there's little debate about the issue over here. At DU, things can get quite spirited. The pro-gun liberals over there battle it out regularly with the gun banners and chew their emotionalism up to pieces repeatedly with straight facts. And then these "Gungeoneers" as they're called are accused of employing "NRA talking points" --at which point the gun banners have lost the argument.

Yep! It can be fun lurking over there on the gun threads and seeing the pro-RKBA side win over and over again.

16 posted on 01/17/2013 1:47:31 PM PST by Drew68
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To: Bayard

Yes, he is. It’s called unearned moral superiority.


17 posted on 01/17/2013 2:52:21 PM PST by Clock King
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To: lbryce
Stereotypes of the hunter as the backwoods, toothless animal-killer span pop culture, from Elmer Fudd to South Park's Uncle Jimbo — the gun-totin', do-what-I-want wacko who hunts despite laws passed by "the Democrats." He tells Cartman and friends to yell, "It's coming right for us!" before shooting so that even rabbit hunting can be explained in court as a matter of self-defense.

Correction: only white hunters fit this description. The "indigenous pipples" (whether Native Americans, Australian aborigines, or Africans) were able to kill their game with integrity because they were a part of nature's "great circle of life." Only Clem is alienated from nature (probably because he believes in Genesis).

18 posted on 01/18/2013 8:53:40 AM PST by Zionist Conspirator (Ki-hagoy vehamamlakhah 'asher lo'-ya`avdukh yove'du; vehagoyim charov yecheravu!)
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